The recent departure of U.S. warships from the Pacific has left a strategic void in the crucial region as forces turn their attention to the Middle East.
The USS Lincoln Strike Group, which consists of a fleet of warships and fighter jets led by the Lincoln aircraft carrier, arrived at the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) area of operation last week after departing from the U.S. Indo-Pacific (INDOPACOM) earlier in August. The Lincoln was the last remaining aircraft carrier in the Pacific — a flashpoint for hostilities between China and several U.S allies — and there won’t be a replacement in the region anytime soon, according to Naval News.
USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), equipped with F-35C and F/A-18 Block III fighters, entered the U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) area of responsibility.
The USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), the flagship of Carrier Strike Group 3, is accompanied by Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 21 and… pic.twitter.com/RKoJQshigR
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) August 21, 2024
Several ships from the U.S. naval armada have repositioned to the Middle East in anticipation of a flash conflict between Israel and other U.S. adversaries in the region, chiefly Iran, the world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism. Israel and Hezbollah exchanged hundreds of hundreds of missiles, rockets and drones on Sunday in one of the largest cross-fire incidents between the two adversaries in months.
Following the strikes on Sunday, Israel and Hezbollah signaled that they are ready to de-escalate tensions in an effort to avoid a broader regional war, according to The Wall Street Journal. […]
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